Modular construction's value proposition is well-established — faster delivery, factory quality control, and more predictable schedules across residential, multifamily, hospitality, and workforce housing. But the financing structures lenders use haven't caught up. In this episode, Built Different examines the capital design problem slowing modular adoption: the timing mismatch between how modular projects are built and how traditional construction lenders release funds, with practical frameworks for developers, manufacturers, and ADU professionals looking to close the gap.
Modular construction's value proposition is well-established — faster delivery, factory quality control, and more predictable schedules across residential, multifamily, hospitality, and workforce housing. But the financing structures lenders use haven't caught up. In this episode, Built Different examines the capital design problem slowing modular adoption: the timing mismatch between how modular projects are built and how traditional construction lenders release funds, with practical frameworks for developers, manufacturers, and ADU professionals looking to close the gap.
Key Takeaways:
The modular construction argument has largely been won on the construction side. The constraint now is capital design — specifically, whether lenders, brokers, and capital partners can be educated and equipped to underwrite factory-built projects on their own terms. Developers and manufacturers who build lender-ready packages, bring financing into planning-stage conversations, and match homeowners to the right equity product will have a structural advantage as the industry scales. Those who wait for the capital side to figure it out on its own will keep hitting the same delays.
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Built Different is a daily podcast for developers, general contractors, and capital partners working in modular, volumetric, and off-site construction.
No hype. No futurism. Just execution reality.
Each episode breaks down what actually determines success or failure in factory-built projects: coordination gaps, design freeze timing, transportation risks, sequencing failures, financing mismatches, and the hidden costs no one models.
This isn't a show about the promise of modular. It's about what happens when modules hit the jobsite—and what you need to get right before they do.
Topics include:
Why modular projects fail (and it's not the factory)
Design freeze and its hidden costs
Transportation as construction risk
Site work that still controls the timeline
Where modular actually saves money—and where it doesn't
Sequencing, coordination, and the gaps between systems
3-4 minutes daily. Built for people who build.
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